Salt (Noun, Adjective and Verb), Saltness
Salt (Noun, Adjective and Verb), Saltness
a late form of hals (found in some mss. in Mar 9:49), is used (a) literally in Mat 5:13 (2nd part); Mar 9:50 (1st part, twice); Luk 14:34 (twice); (b) metaphorically, of “believers,” Mat 5:13 (1st part); of their “character and condition,” Mar 9:50 (2nd part); of “wisdom” exhibited in their speech, Col 4:6.
Being possessed of purifying, perpetuating and antiseptic qualities, “salt” became emblematic of fidelity and friendship among eastern nations. To eat of a person’s “salt” and so to share his hospitality is still regarded thus among the Arabs. So in Scripture, it is an emblem of the covenant between God and His people, Num 18:19; 2Ch 13:5; so again when the Lord says “Have salt in yourselves, and be at peace one with another” (Mar 9:50). In the Lord’s teaching it is also symbolic of that spiritual health and vigor essential to Christian virtue and counteractive of the corruption that is in the world, e.g., Mat 5:13, see (b) above. Food is seasoned with “salt” (see B); every meal offering was to contain it, and it was to be offered with all offerings presented by Israelites, as emblematic of the holiness of Christ, and as betokening the reconiliation provided for man by God on the ground of the death of Christ, Lev 2:13. To refuse God’s provision in Christ and the efficacy of His expiatory sacrifice is to expose oneself to the doom of being “salted with fire,” Mar 9:49.
While “salt” is used to fertilize soil, excess of it on the ground produces sterility (e.g., Deu 29:23; Jdg 9:45; Jer 17:6; Zep 2:9).
akin to A, signifies “to sprinkle” or “to season with salt,” Mat 5:13; Mar 9:49 (see under A). Cp. SAVOR, B.
occurs in Jam 3:12, “salt (water).”
denotes “saltless” (a, negative, n, euphonic, and A), insipid, Mar 9:50, “have lost its saltness,” lit., “have become (ginomai) saltless (analos);” cp. moraino in Luk 14:34 (see SAVOR, B).